This week’s fresh listings:

 

This page is to be updated every Tuesday and will contain all the latest Coin, Medal & Token listings for that particular week.

 

The more observant of you may have realised that I no longer keep previous "Fresh Listings" coins on this page. 

All for sale coins can be found via the category grid on the front page.  Most sold coins are now accessible via a new link on that same category grid.

 

Additions to www.HistoryInCoins.com for week commencing Tuesday 22nd April 2025

 

 

 

WSC-9127:  Scottish William 1st, The Lion, Medieval Hammered Silver Penny.  Short Cross & Stars, Phase B coinage of 1205-1230.  Spink 5029.  Obverse: the rarer LE REI WILAM obverse regnal reading; reverse: +hVE WALTER – jointly struck by the moneyers of the Edinburgh & Perth mints.  An excellent portrait piece from child-like dies, but elevated by the attractive toning.  Very old ticket.  A handsome coin.  £395

Provenance:

ex Mike Vosper

 

WSC-9128:  John Baliol Scottish Hammered Silver Long Cross & Stars Penny.  First coinage, rough surface issue, circa 1292-6.  Berwick mint.  Obv: +IOhANNES DEI GR, bust left.  Rev: +REX SCOTORVM, long cross with x4 mullets of six points in angles.  Spink 5065.  John Baliol was “chosen” out of thirteen competitors for the Scottish throne upon the death of Alexander III.  The English king, Edward I, was the arbitrator.  John Baliol’s four year reign ended in 1296 with his abdication when Berwick, Edinburgh, Perth, Roxburgh and Stirling all fell to the English.  Tim Owen ticket.  Rare.  £435

Provenance:

ex Tim Owen

 

WSC-9129:  John Baliol Scottish Hammered Silver Long Cross & Stars HALFPENNY.  Second coinage, smooth surface issue, circa 1292-6.  Berwick mint.  +[REX SC]OTORAA, long cross with x2 mullets or stars of six points in angles.  Spink 5074. John Baliol was “chosen” out of thirteen competitors for the Scottish throne upon the death of Alexander III.  The English king, Edward I, was the arbitrator.  John Baliol’s four year reign ended in 1296 with his abdication when Berwick, Edinburgh, Perth, Roxburgh and Stirling all fell to the English.  A hard denomination to find.  £595

 

WSC-9130:  Robert II Scottish Hammered Silver Long Cross & Stars HALFPENNY.  Left facing bust of Robert with the reverse unusually showing x5 pointed mullets in all quarters unlike the previous x5 points in two quarters.  Spink 5152.  The first Scottish king of the Stewart line.  Edinburgh mint.  Robert II’s grandfather was Robert the Bruce; his mother, Marjorie Bruce, being Robert Bruce's daughter.  Robert was Regent under the imprisoned David II and was himself later imprisoned with his three sons in England when Edward III was recognised as successor to David II.  All Robert II coins are hard to source, these minors particularly so.  £295

Provenance:

ex Mike Vosper

 

WSC-9131:  James III Scottish Hammered Silver Long Cross & Stars HALFPENNY.  Light coinage, type IV, circa 1482 only.  Edinburgh mint.  Front facing bust of James, very much following the English issues.  The reverse is more unusual: x3 pellets in two quarters with single mullets of five points in the remaining quarters.  Spink 5283.  James III was an interesting individual.  Crowned aged 9, the Scots lost Berwick to keep the peace with England but gained Orkney and the Shetland Isles as a part dowry (which makes you wonder what the other part of the dowry was!) when James married Margaret of Denmark (she was just 13).  James III was so unpopular due to his lifestyle and blind insistence upon a policy of pursuing an alliance with the Kingdom of England that he was, perhaps inevitably, murdered after his defeat at Sauchieburn.  This is a particularly hard coin to source, especially in this grade - the Spink plate coin, the very best example they could source from their vast contact book, is not really that much better than this coin.  A rare coin.  £665

Provenance:

ex Hall's Coins

 

WTH-9132:  1551 Edward VI Hammered Silver Sixpence - an Extraordinary example!   Fine silver issue of 1551-3, initial mark y, London mint, Spink 2483.  A pleasing example of this attractive and sought after issue which is rarer than the shillings and, just like the shillings, often presents as problematic - damaged, bent, worn etc.  Some damage is undoubtedly down to a very sceptical public in the early 1550's who had lived through 50+ years of debased coinage thanks to Henry VIII.  They would be disbelieving of these fine silver coins and so would bite them and bend them to test they weren't fakes.  This coin is centrally pierced, strongly implying that it was done so under the governance of Sir Isaac Newton himself, in 1696 at the Great Re-Coinage.  Hammered coinage in England was phased out at the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 and was officially ended in 1662 with the introduction of Charles II milled silver coins.  Whilst no more hammered coins were minted post 1662, the old hammered coinage was still legal tender; hammered and milled running side by side, although much of it was battered and bruised through shear over-usage, not to mention seriously underweight through clipping.  In 1696, although hammered coinage was still popular with the public, it was decided that enough was enough – all circulating hammered coinage was to be assessed by the mint.  Anything substandard was to be exchanged for the new milled coinage and anything in high enough grade and, most importantly, of the correct weight, was allowed to circulate for a few years more.  This latter cohort was identified as “of still legal tender” by the addition of a central punch or piercing administered by the mint.  The mint employee who processed this coin back in 1696 somehow managed to make the piercing go directly through the eye of Edward!  You could argue that he was perhaps mischievous and bored and did it intentionally, but the punch has actually gone through the reverse side (that being the larger hole) so he literally had no sight of the obverse king's eye... forgive the pun!  What an amazing coincidence.

There were problems, as one would perhaps expect with such a huge national undertaking: 

1.  Due to the mint’s promise of a like-for-like value replacement, regardless of condition, many enterprising individuals, before submitting for exchange, clipped their hammered coinage further still, retaining the silver shavings to be utilised for effectively what was free money later on. 

2.  As a direct result of this extra clipping, together with the high cost of minting the new milled coinage, the government lost a great deal of money – nearly £3 million. 

3.  The timing was appalling – the new milled money was not ready in time for an exchange.  Riots threatened and there was great public unrest until the government bridged the period by issuing paper notes.

4.  The infamous Window Tax, of which we’re all still cognisant of today, was introduced specifically to pay for this near £3 million financial black hole.  There have been some bad government taxes over the years, but a window tax?!

Bearing in mind there were not actually that many hammered coins that passed the grade in 1696 (the process was actually 1696-99), together with the fact that post 1699, whenever a pierced hammered coin passed through the hands of officialdom, it would inevitably be withdrawn, it’s perhaps easy to see why these coins are rare.  You really don’t see than many of them.  Georgian and Victorian gentlemen collectors would not be interested in pierced coins (for goodness’ sake, these were the people who mutilated the Cromwell crowns by smoothing over the infamous die flaw because they couldn’t live with them as they were!!), which is another reason why these extremely interesting coins are so rare.  Find another like this!!  £550

 

WSax-9133:  Anglo Saxon Silver Sceat.  Primary phase, circa 675-760 AD, minted in various regions of South-Eastern and Southern England.  Series B1.  Obverse: diademed head, supposedly wearing large hoop earrings, facing right within a serpent circle; reverse: a bird atop a cross with annulets either side.  Spink 777.  It is interesting to note the Christian cross on the reverse.  In AD 595, Pope Gregory the Great chose Augustine to lead a mission to convert the pagan Anglo-Saxons of Britain to the Christian faith.  Augustine was most likely living as a monk in Rome at the time.  He duly arrived on these shores in AD 597:  Æthelberht of Kent became the first Anglo-Saxon king to be baptised, around AD 600. He in turn imposed Christianity on Saebert of Essex and Rædwald of East Anglia. Augustine (later Saint Augustine) was recorded by Bede as really only talking to the top end of English society.  Columba and Aiden were the other two recorded in Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People who were on a mission to convert Britons to Christianity.  Columba was slightly earlier than Augustine but alas he only focused on Iona in Scotland.  Aiden was the most effective, according to Bede, as although he set up the Lindesfarne Monastery (later to be targeted so infamously by the Vikings), he went out and about, spreading the Gospel to the common man in the street, and a great many of them.  However, he was much later, around AD 634.  These early Saxon coins served three important purposes: to legitimise the king, to promote the Christian faith to the populace and to facilitate trade.  I suspect that was the correct order of importance!  £235

 

WSax-9134:  Anglo Saxon Silver Sceat.  Primary phase, circa 675-760 AD, minted in the central River Thames region of England.  Series F, circa 700-10 AD.  Obverse: crude bust, right, wearing an unusual headdress with a Christian cross behind; reverse: another cross, this time atop a couple of steps with an annulet above.  Many old tickets.  Spink 781.  It is interesting to note the Christian cross both sides.  In AD 595, Pope Gregory the Great chose Augustine to lead a mission to convert the pagan Anglo-Saxons of Britain to the Christian faith.  Augustine was most likely living as a monk in Rome at the time.  He duly arrived on these shores in AD 597:  Æthelberht of Kent became the first Anglo-Saxon king to be baptised, around AD 600. He in turn imposed Christianity on Saebert of Essex and Rædwald of East Anglia. Augustine (later Saint Augustine) was recorded by Bede as really only talking to the top end of English society.  Columba and Aiden were the other two recorded in Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People who were on a mission to convert Britons to Christianity.  Columba was slightly earlier than Augustine but alas he only focused on Iona in Scotland.  Aiden was the most effective, according to Bede, as although he set up the Lindesfarne Monastery (later to be targeted so infamously by the Vikings), he went out and about, spreading the Gospel to the common man in the street, and a great many of them.  However, he was much later, around AD 634.  These early Saxon coins served three important purposes: to legitimise the king, to promote the Christian faith to the populace and to facilitate trade.  I suspect that was the correct order of importance!  £495